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A14032 An exposition vpon the canonicall Epistle of Saint Iames with the tables, analysis, and resolution, both of the whole epistle, and euerie chapter thereof: with the particular resolution of euerie singular place. Diuided into 28. lectures or sermons, made by Richard Turnbull, sometimes fellow of Corpus Christie Colledge in Oxford· now preacher and minister of the word of God and the holy Sacraments, in the citie of London. Turnbull, Richard, d. 1593. 1591 (1591) STC 24339; ESTC S118931 472,056 683

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saide to his Soul Soul eate and drinke for thou hast much goods laide vp for thee Seing his state was so vncertaine as that night it should be changed The Apostle Iohn disputing of the vanitie of worldly wealth and pompe what so euer concludeth 1. Iohn 2. the world vanisheth and the things therin Finally the preacher concluding all worldly things vnder a most vncertain fraile and brittle condition censureth them all 1. Eccles. with one iudgement Vanitie of vanitie all is vanitie See we not by dayly experience the miserable vanitie of this worldly condition came not Craesus the rich Prince of whom it became a prouerb richer then Craesus to miserie for all his wealth was not Xerxes the King of Persia for all his pompe and glorie discomfited did not Dionisius the King of Siracuse fall from a King to bee a scholemaster came not holy Iob from greate riches to miserable pouertie for a season do not many now florish in wealth to morow come to extreame penurie Seeing these things are of fraile vncertaine and dowtefull condition shal men thereof by the will of God bereft mourn and not rather reioyce as the Apostle exhorteth Saint Iames therefore to persuade men to reioyce when God turneth their condition by affliction and so humbleth them draweth his reason from the vncertainnes and vanitie of their nature wherby being humbled we ought to reioyce The vanitie and vncertaintie of worldly wealth and riches the apostle describing thereunto vseth a similitude and comparison resembling the glorious state of this li●e vnto a flower There is nothing for the time more beautifull flourishing and excellent then the flower yet the flower and the beautie thereof vanisheth away and withereth speedely for though it now flourish sprout spring vp though the beautie appeare wonderfull and excellent that Salomon in all his royaltie was not to be compared to the lillie of the field for brauerie of beautie yet if the sun Mat. 6. appeare in heate it drieth it vp it scorcheth it it burneth it and so it withereth falleth away and the goodly shape thereof perisheth So that the lillie the rose the violet and other flowers of account which in the morning were beutifull in sight fragrant and sweet in smell moist in hande are in the euening consumed and pearished So when the sunne and burning heate of persecution and trouble shall arise vpon the riches of this world they are easily remoued and pearish quickly This comparison wherein mans pompe and worldly glorie is compared to a flower is in sundrie places and not altogether in diuers things vsed in holy Scripture The Prophet of God speaking not only of worldly riches Isai 40. but of mans life also with al the pompe and glorie he can here attaine vnto and whatsoeuer is in him vseth the same comparison in a thing not altogether diuers and therefore saith I heard a voyce saying Crie And I saide What shall I crie He saide that all flesh is grasse and all the glorie thereof as the flower of the field the grasse withereth and the flower fadeth away because the spirite of the Lord blewe vpon it Whereby it appeareth that not onely worldly wealth and riches but also all mans wisdome and naturall powers are as the flower that withereth The Prophet Dauid describing the miserable weake Psal 103. and frayle condition of man hereunto compareth him also The daies of man are as grasse as a flower of the fielde so flourisheth he For the winde goeth ouer it and it is gone and the place thereof shall know it no more As ●hen the flower which in the morning florisheth through the burning heate of the sunne withereth and pearisheth Euen so they which now wallowe in wealth and haue all things at their willes which are now cloathed in fine silke and purple who now glitter and glister with golde and Luke 16 pearles which are now attended on with great traines and troupes of men who leade mightie armies and are caried in coaches like princes who for aboundance of all things and perfect beautie and glory in worldly respectes are as mortall Gods vpon earth oftentimes are bereft of all their riches and glorie and pearish as the grasse And thus all their pompe glorie wealth earthly felicitie is vncertaine What foolishnes then hath wrapt vp our vnderstanding what blindnes hath possessed our heartes what vanitie hath bewitched vs and rauished our mindes what miste of errour hath compassed and ouershadowed the light of our knowledge that we see not the frailtie of our owne state and condition to learne a better profession of the holy Apostle that being humbled by afflictions we may reioyce as we are exhorted let the brother of lowe degree reioyce when he is exalted and againe the rich man when he is made lowe for as the flower of the grasse shal he vanish away for as when the sun riseth with heate then the grasse withereth his flower fadeth away and the goodly shape thereof pearisheth euen so shall the rich man wither away in all his waies And thus the Apostle proueth by the distinguishing of the persons of men that the doctrine of the crosse and the patient bearing of the same is profitable to all men both to poore and rich and so to all The persons thus distinguished the next secōd thing in these verses which is the fourth and last thing in the Fourth thing in the treatise of the crosse whole treatie of the crosse and comfort taking therein is the conclusion Seeing therfore the case thus standeth that we must coūt it exceding ioy when we fal into diuers tēptations seeing the bearing of affliction is the triall of our faith which to suffer to be tried is comely and honest for a Christian seeing by triall of our faith we attain to that worthy vertue of patience seeing patience attained vnto maketh vs perfect seeing the crosse and the doctrine thereof is necessarie and profitable for poore and riche therefore blessed is the man that endureth temptation for when he is tried he shall receaue the crowne of life which the Lord hath promised to them that loue him In which conclusion fiue things may be obserued 1 The reward it selfe promised to such as patiently endure the crosse which the Apostle noteth vnder the word blessed Blessed is that man that endureth temptations Blessednes is the greatest of all rewards geuen vnto men wherein whatsoeuer is good is conteined the Apostle therefore to pricke them forward and to stirre them on to pacience promiseth happines and blessednes to those that endure tēptatiō Our Sauiour Christ entreating of the reward which the poore in spirite that is such as by Mat. 5. sundrie miseries and calamities which are ioyned with pouertie were afflicted promiseth them happines and felicitie Blessed are the poore in spirite for theirs is the kingdom of heauen And a little after vnfolding this pouertie by her kinde and particulars as persecution reproach and
Againe we haue the faith and religion of Christ in respect of persons when wee holde that onely for true religion which hath succession of many Bishoppes confirmation of diuers Councels defence from sundry Princes continuance of many yeares regard had to these circumstances not to the trueth it selfe whereunto they must haue respect Thus might and did the lewes defend their idolatrie against the Prophet Ieremie from succession Ierem. 44. of Priestes authoritie of Princes continuance of time thus our aduersaries the Papistes by the like means measure the religion of Christ and therefore haue it in respect of persons when they rather respect the successiō of their Romish Bishoppes the consent of Councels called by themselues defence of Princes either bewitched with the entising strumpet of Babylon or ouerruled by the authoritie of the Pope himselfe Continuance of time which serueth for defence of all idolatrie and iniquitie of the heathen then the worde it selfe grounded vpon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles Iesus Ephes 2. Christ himselfe being the head corner stone Thus haue they also the faith of Iesus Christ in respect of persons 5 What when for gaine and aduauntage wee can make the Gospell to serue mens pleasures and do apply it to mens humors which is making marchaundise of the gospel reprooued by Paul haue we not the faith of Christ 2. Cor. 2. in respect of persons 6 What when either for feare or fauour wee spare some and bitterly inueigh against others not once touching some and for the same or some lesse fault cōdemne others to the bottomlesse pitte of destruction are we not partiall in our selues and haue we not the faith of Christ in respect of persons The Apostle condemning all these but specially the first kinde exhorteth the brethren not to haue the faith of our glorious Lord in respect of persons 4 This euill cannot stande with Christian profession the Gospell teacheth that with God is no respect of Acts 10. persons but that they all which fear God work righteousnes are accepted through the ioyfull tidings of saluation Gal. 3. by Iesus Christ in whome there is neither male nor female bonde nor free neither rich nor poore but they are all alike vnto him The sound of this Gospel went not to the rich noble honourable and mightie men of the world alone but it was preached to the poor also Hereby are we vnited into an holy brotherhood and this brother hood implyeth equalitie in this case so that the rich may not be regarded the poore neglected but the Spiritual brotherhoode is violate and broaken Through the Gospell we become all of vs members of one body each of vs 1. Cor. 12. members of each other and all members of Christ our head If then for riches honour worldly pompe we esteem and count of men and not for their vnion with Christ and their incorporation with him we fall away frō Christian religion Thus the respect of mens persons and esteming religion by outward appearance of men cannot stande with the faith of Christ which teacheth vs to embrace Christians with brotherly loue and not to regarde one with the contempt of another which as a thing vnseemely our calling repugnant to loue contrary to our profession S. Iames in his proposition condemning exhorteth the brethren not to haue the faith of our glorious Lord Iesus Christ in respect of persons And these are the two things in the first place in the proposition or state of this Treatise obserued the persons whom he admonisheth and the thing whereof he admonisheth My brethrē haue not the faith of our glorious Lord Iesus Christ in respect of persons Now this glorious Lorde euen our Sauiour Iesus Christ who hath loued vs and geuen himselfe for vs to Ephes 5. Tit. 2. be a sacrifice of a sweete smell vnto God geue vs grace so to esteeme of our Christian brethren as that wee preferre not one to the disgrace and contempt of another but that we equally esteeming them all as bought with the bloud of the same Lambe immaculate and vndefiled may haue a right estimation and iudgement of Christian profession and that men without respect of persons walking sincerely may glorifie God of him be glorified in the life to come through our Lord Iesus Christ To whom with the father c. Iames Chap. 2. verses 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9 Sermon 10. 2 For if there come into your companie a man with a gold ring and in goodly apparell and there come also a poore man in vile apparell 3 And ye haue a respect to him that weareth the gay clothing and say vnto him sit thou here in a goodly place and say vnto the poore Stande thou there or sit here vnder my footstoole 4 Are you not partiall in your selues and become iudges of euill thoughts 5 Hearken my deare brethren hath not God chosen the poore of this world that they should be rich in faith and heires of the kingdome promised to them that loue him 6 But ye haue despised the poore Do not the rich oppresse you by tyrannie and doe they not draw you before the iudgement seates 7 Doe they not blaspheme the worthie name after which ye be named 8 But if ye fulfill the roiall law according to the scripture which saith thou shalt loue thy neighbor as thy self ye do wel 9 But if ye regard the persons ye commit sinne and are rebuked of the lawe as transgressours IN these wordes and the rest to 14. verse the Apostle confirmeth that which he before proposed and proueth by two arguments that to haue the faith of Iesus Christ in respect of persons is euill The first reason is from the example of such as thus accept the persons of men the other is from the nature of the lawe of God which by this meane is transgressed The first argument is handled in these words and verses set downe In which reason frō their example which respect mēs persons there are three things to be considered 1 the example it selfe verses 2. 3. 4. 2 The euils in that example condemned which are two 1 Peruersnesse of iudgement ver 5. part 6. 2 Madnes part 6 7 verse 3 The conclusion v. 8. 9. In which there are foure things 1 What this law is 2 Why called roiall 3 What it willeth 4 How it is fulfilled The example of such as haue the saith of christ in respect of persons 1 Concerning the first the example of men thus respecting the rich with the cōtempt of the poore christian brethren thereof thus saith S. James For if there come into your companie a man with a gold ring and in goodly apparell and there come in also a poore man in vile raiment and ye haue respect to him that weareth the gay clothing say vnto him Sit here in a goodly place but say to the poore Stand there or sit here vnder my footestoole are you not partiall
in your doings and become iudges of euill thoughts The force of which place is that such as in publike assemblies and generall meetings of men preferre the rich and great men of the worlde but disdaine and reprochfully dispise the poore offende and are iudges of euil thoughts do amisse iudge and that corruptly such therefore as respect mens persons do euill respect of persons is therefore euill To preferre a rich man for his gold rings sake or for his apparels sake and to contemne the poore for his vile rayment and pouerties sake is sinne To place the rich in worshipfull place albeit vnworthie and to disdaine the poore neuer so vertuous neuer so honest neuer so godly is iniquitie be fore God and a thing by the Apostle condemned Wherein the rule of equitie is broken the law of iustice is violate which requireth that that be giuen to euerie one which appertayneth to euery one VVhich Saint Paul also expressing willeth that we giue euery one their dutie tribute to whom tribute custome to whom custome feare Rom. 13. to whome feare honour to whome honour belongeth Now to whom belongeth greater honour then to such as are vnfained professours of Iesus Christ Honour and glorie saieth Aristotle is giuen in token of vertue and what vertue is greater then religion the true faith in Iesus 1. Rethori●o Christ Such therefore as are religious and professe the faith of Christ vnfainedly albeit they be pooe are they to whom honour belongeth To haue the rich in account for their wealth brauerie and the poore in cōtempt for their bafenesse and beggerie is contrarie to equitie and iustice Which thing who so doth is partiall and a iudger of euill thoughts in following a false rule of difference making riches the rule of difference and deseruer of honour when riches are not but faith and religion all such are worthily condemned for that they are more moued with outward pompe then true pitie worldly countenance then Christian calling thinking saith Baeda and Vpon thi● place iudging within themselues that a mā is so much the better how much the richer which to thinke is great partialitie and worthie to be condemned This place taketh not away degrees of honour from men neither denieth it honour or worship to be giuen to men of honour or worshippe albeit wicked and vnworthie neither preacheth the apostle disordered confusion as the Libertines and Anabaptists in former times haue and now phantastica land vnbrideled spirites doe who would remoue degreles of honour and calling not onely out of the Church but I feare out of the common wealth also For the Scriptures haue taught vs the Prophets haue confirmed by examples our Sauiour Christ hath willed and the Apostles haue inioyned honour to be giuen euen to the idolatrous vnworthie wicked persons S. Iamet here onely teacheth not to esteeme or iudge of the faith and religion of Christ in men by their outward appearance neither in the publike meetings of Christians to reuerence honour preferre the wealthy and rich men of the world being prophane wicked with the disgracing discountenancing and disdaining of the poore which are religious as the words themselues import when to the rich men say sit here in a good and worshipfull place and to the poore sit there or sit vnder my foote-stoole which argueth disdainfull contempt of the poore brethren For if in spectacles and theatrical sights in election of officers in parliaments in assises and sessions and in al well ordered assemblies and meetings of men there is difference of men and comlinesse of persons obseured how much more in ecclesiasticall meetings and christian conuenticles ought there an order to be obserued wherof the primitiue church was carefull appointing their place for the ministers theirs for the laitie theirs for thē which were to be catechised theirs for them which were to doe penaunce and make open acknowledgement of their offences The same was ratified by counsels confirmed by fathers and for the businesse of the Churches or the reprouing of mens vices and correcting of them which fel both Tertulian and S. Ambrose writeth that there Apolog. 39. vpon 1. Tim. 5. 1. were seueral places for certaine persons assigned the shadow whereof and as it were the print and token in our Churches remaine in the seates of Bishops in consistories and such like So then all difference and degrees of men are not here forbidden but in Christian assemblies to respect the rich with the contempt and disdaine of the poore is condemned in this example As such then as preferre a man for his gold ring or gay garments but contemne the poore for his vile and miserable condition making outward pompe riches glorie when they should make soundnesse of faith the zeale of religion the sinceritie of the heart and care of Gods glorie the difference of men therein greatly offended So when we haue the faith of Christ in estimation for the persons sake and iudge of religion by riches wealth honour we offend in like maner in hauing the faith of Christ in respect of persons and by this example are here condemned By which it commeth to passe that rich men wealthie men honourable men oftentimes puft vp and swelling with pride that euery were they are regarded disdain and cōtemne all other thus often times vile men vnworthy prophane vngodly are exalted and those in whom vertue flourisheth faith shineth wisedome appeareth are suppressed and not regarded which is a thing intollerable in Christian profession Hereby men are partiall in themselues and become iudges of euill thoughts being euill affected in so great a matter 2 In which example the Apostle condemneth two The euils in such as respect mens persons euils 1 The peruersenesse of their iudgements which thus respect the persons of men 2 Their madnesse And for the first euill whch is the peruersnesse of their iudgement thus saith the Apostle hearken my beloued brethren hath not God chosen the poore of this worlde that they should be rich in faith and heires of the kingdome But you haue despised the poore Their iudgement is naught and peruerse who iudge contrarie vnto God this men do which honour the rich which are prophane and wicked contemne the poore which are godly For God contemneth the proud and wicked be they neuer so rich neuer so wealthie neuer so noble neuer so honourable Psal 18. 1. Pet. 5. regardeth the hūble godly be they neuer so poore neuer so miserable neuer so base of condition Thus god accounteth not of men for riches wealth honor nobilitie but for godlines faith religion and vertue then men iudging contrariwise hereunto are peruerse in iudgement That God honoureth the poore whom men contemne and despise the Apostle teacheth in that he calleth them to be rich in faith and heires of the kingdome promised vnto those which loue him To contemne the poore whom God accounteth of and to disdaine them whome God honoureth is great
peruersnesse in iudgement Our Sauiour Christ shewing whom Almightie God hath called Matt. 5. to eternall happinesse in his euerlasting kingdome pronoūceth the poore in spirit to be heires therof wherfore he saith Blessed are the poore in spirit for theirs is the kingdome of heauen So then such as by the miserable condition pouertie of this life haue their minds and spirites brought vnder and tamed to obey God are they whom God hath chosen to be rich in faith heires of the kingdome of heauen This thing the blessed virgin acknowledging affirmeth such as of whome no account Luke 1. is made in the world and are altogether vile in the eies of men by God to be aduaunced euen to heauenly dignitie and therefore sayeth that God had put downe the mightie from their seate and exalted them of low degree Saint Paul disputing of the calling of men to eternall saluation by the preaching of the Gospel shewing that the poore of this worlde haue the chiefe rowme and place in the eternall election of the Saints writeth thereof in this wise to the Church of Corinth brethren you see your calling howe that not manie wise ● Cor. 1. after the flesh not manie mightie not manie noble are called but GOD hath chosen the foolish things of the worlde to confound the wise God hath chosen the weake things to confounde the mightie vile things and things which are despised in the worlde hath God chosen and things which are not to confound the things which are that no flesh should reioyce in his sight Such Leuit. 26. Jere. 31. 1. Cor. 6. as were vile weake miserable poore base hath God called to be heires of his kingdom To these hath God made promise of good things euen that he would be their God they should be his people These are the Lords inheritance Exod. 19. 1. Pet. 2. and his portion for euer these are a chosen genetion a holy nation a roiall priesthoode a peculiar people vnto the Lord. Though then their condition be miserable in the worlde albeit they be implicate and inwrapped in basenesse pouertie yet are they replenished with spiritual treasure and chosen of God to be rich in faith and heires of his kingdome Seeing God so regardeth esteemeth and honoureth the poore of this world that in the inheritance of his heauenly kingdome he preferreth thē before the rich and proude of the people then is it great peruersnesse of iudgement to preferre the rich whom he reiecteth and contemne those whom he honoureth with the glorie of his heauenly kingdome Which place as it worthily condemneth the vanitie and peruersnes of their iudgment which preferre the prophane rich men of the world to the poore which are godly religious so is it also full of singular consolation and comfort for the poore thus dispised of men For if they haue an eye to the heauenly kingdom wherunto they are called by God what is more excellent If they regard eternall life whereof they are heires by Iesus Christ what is more glorious If they looke vnto the immortal incorruptible inheritance which is laid vp reserued for them 1. Pet. 1. in heauen what is more singular If they record recount with themselues that they are chosen of God to be rich in faith what is more comfortable Which dutifull consideration swaloweth vp as a bottomles gulfe deuoureth Rom. 8. all the miseries afflictions calamities of this world while wee holde fast the principle of the Apostle that all the afflictions and suffering of this life are not to be compared vnto the glorie which shal be reuealed to the children 2. Cor. 4. of God whose momentanie and light afflictions cause vnto them a farre more excellent waight of glorie while they looke not to the things which are present but to the things which are to come neither to those which are seene but to those that are not seene for the things which are seene are tēporall but the things which are not seene are eternal This consolation incouragement paciently to endure the pouerty basenes of their life is herehence ministred by the apostle when to condemne such as haue the faith of Christ in respect of persons of peruersenes of iudgement he sayth Hearken my deare brethren hath not God chosen the poore of this worlde to bee rich in faith and heires of the kingdome which he hath promised vnto those that loue him That the Apostle sayeth hath not God chosen the poore of this world that they should be rich in faith c. it followeth not that therefore hee casteth off all rich men But here is mention made of the choosing of the poore partly for their comfort partly to beare downe the intollerable pride and insolencie of the prophane rich men partly to teach that God chooseth not men to his eternall inheritance for any thing whereof the worlde accounteth Otherwise it is true that God our of all estates of men chooseth certaine whome hee will make rich in fayth and heires of his kingdome which consisteth of all estates degrees and conditions of men seruants and maisters princes and people rich poore base and honourable for God would all men to be saued 1. Tim. 2. 2. Pet. 3. and to come to the knowledge of the truth God hath chosen the poore to be heires of his kingdom but you haue despised them to despise them whom God hath chosen to contemne them whom he accoūteth of is in iudgement to swa●ue from God which is peruersnes for to oppose our selues to God in our iudgemēt and therein to be contrarie vnto him to preferre those whom he refuseth to refuse them whom god preferreth to honor thē whom God reiecteth to reiect those whom God honoreth is wa●wardnes peruersnes in iudgmēt wherof they are guilty which honor rich prophane persons dispise the poore which are godly which is the first euil in these respecters of persons by the apostle here condēned 2 The second euill in them is madnes it is a kinde of frantikenes madnes for men to reuerence honour and preferre those before the godly brethrē whō they for many causes ought rather to accoūt execrable cursed The prophane rich men for sundry causes ought to be held as execrable cursed thē to honor prefer exalt these is a kind of madnes This do the respecters of persōs who seeing a mā come in with a gold ring on his finger in good ●y apparrell say Sitte thou downe in a good place but to the poore in vile rayment say with contempt Sitte there ●or here vnder my footstoole The respecters of persons therefore are not onely peruerse in iudgement but mad after a manner also That the rich ought rather to be counted and helde ●s cursed then to be honoured and preferred before the ●oore brethren the Apostle sheweth and that for 3 great ●uils and sinnes which commonly raigne in the prophane ●ich men of
sinne and translated into the glorious libertie of the sonnes of Rom. 8. God And here to bee iudged is to bee discharged quitte deliuered and absolued from death and damnation as the place it selfe may import vnto vs so doe and so speake as they which shall bee iudged by the lawe of libertie that is such as trust by the mercie of God to be deliuered from death and damnation The reason of this exhortatorie conclusion is there shall bee condemnation mercilesse vnto him that sheweth no mercie and mercie reioyceth agaynst condemnation Such as in disdayning and contemning the poore and preferring the rich beeing prophane and wicked shewe themselues mercilesse and voyde of loue shall themselues taste not of mercie but of iudgement not of loue but of the wrath of GOD but they which in this poynt fulfill the royall lawe of GOD commaunding men to loue their neighbours as themselues and so shevve themselues mercifull euen tovvardes the poore brethren they shall triumph ouer iudgement and condemnation vvhereunto they shal not be subiect This thing as in the proposed matter it is most true so in other officices and dueties it is no lesse manifest for generally vvho so is of an hard heart merlesse currish and cruell towarde men shall finde God seuere rough sharpe against himself For mercy shal be restrained from those which shew no mercie and iudgement or condemnation mercilesse shal be to them which shewe no mercie If in Christian assemblies men preferre the rich with mercilesse contempt of the poore brethren Almightie God in the assemblie of his Saints and in the meeting together of thousands and ten thousands of his angels shal neglect disdaine thē In the works of mercy who so is merciles shall finde no mercie for he that stoppeth Pro. 21. his eare to the crie of the poore shall crie himselfe and not be heard Wherefore the glutton in the Gospell Luke 16. neglecting the humble suite of poore Lazarus onely for the crummes which fell from his table crieth in hell fire for euer to haue the tippe of his tongue onely to be cooled and findeth no fauour Almightie God in his prophet sheweth himselfe angrie Isai 1. not fauourable to such as by their auarice vsurie oppression and extortion fraud deceite and crueltie in Psal 18. dealing haue beene without pitie Dauid the man of God protesting that God reiecteth them when they crie for helpe either in paine or in feare who reiecte the crie of the poore afflicted saith They cried but there was none to helpe them euen to the Lord but hee answered them not In mutuall pardoning and forgeuenes of sinne when we our selues are harde and straite laced wee finde God harde and seuere toward our selues for he shal find vengeance at the handes of God who seeketh vengeance Ecclus. 28. Mat. 18. Marke 11. 2 in his owne priuate quarrels as Sirach recordeth The seruant who would not haue pitie vpon his felow for one hundred pence is dealt withall in seueritie til all the debt of tenne thousand talents be discharged in the Gospell Who therefore saith Cyprian lost that fauour which before was shewed him because he shewed not fauour to his fellow seruant In iudging of our brethren and all other Vpō the Lords praier dueties to be perfourmed vnto men wee must looke to receaue with the same measure whereby wee haue deliuered If we geue by hard measure of rash and cruel iudgement wee shall reape and receaue againe by the like Wherefore our Sauiour Christ exhorteth men not rashlie to iudge or condemne least they be likewise iudged and Mat. 7. condemned for with what measure we meate vnto other men it shall bee measured with the like vnto vs againe which is the iust iudgement of God against men in the whole course of their liues Such then as are mercilesse and nourish not loue shall not only not obteine mercie but cannot aske mercie at the hands of GOD or man For with what face what looke what countenance can they aske that which they haue denied to others Yea experience and vse of things doe plentifully teach vs that mercie shal be denied the mercilesse and condemnation without pittie shewed vpon them which shew no mercie Haue we not seene many pinched with pouertie bitten with famine eaten with noysome diseases spoiled of their wealth robbed of their riches vexed in their mindes tormented in their bodies afflicted on euerie side who in the daies of their flourishing wealth in the soundnes and health of their bodies and quietnes of their mindes haue beene merciles towardes such as in this wise were afflicted Hath not condemnation execution punishmēt been merciles towardes them for that they shewed no mercie This is therefore generally in al things particularly true in hauing the faith of our glorious Lord Iesus Christ in respect of persons that there shal be condemnation merciles shewed vnto them which shew no mercie The opposite and contrarie member hereunto is mercie reioyceth against condemnation for they which are mercifull shall finde fauour grace and mercie before the iudgement seate of God and reioyce ouer condemnation which through the grace of God they shal escape in as much as by their loue and fruites of mercie they shewe themselues truely inserted and ingraffed into the body of Rom. 8. Iesus Christ whereby they are exempted and freed from condemnation For there is now no condemnation vnto those that are in Iesus Christ which walke not after the flesh but after the spirite These being made by the mercy of God the liuely members of the body of Iesus Christ these being the children of the resurrection these beeing the heires of the grace of god these being the iointheires with Iesus Christ these by their vnfeined loue shewing themselues the faithfull and vndoubted Saints shall not come into condemnation neither see death neither feare they the seueritie of Gods iudgements as doe the wicked but reioyce and triumph ouer condemnation Wherefore seeing that iudgement shal be mercilesse towardes them which shewe no mercie and that mercie reioiceth against condemnation let vs not respecte the outward appearance of men and regarde the riche with disdainfull contempt of the poore and so appeare mercilesse least that we fall into mercilesse condemnation but let vs haue a right iudgement of the brethren that wee serue one another in the feare of GOD And so geuing testimony of the mercie wherof we are partakers through Christ by him may triumph and reioyce ouer condemnation This the GOD of all might maiestie and mercie graunt vnto vs To whom with the sonne and the holy Ghost be all praise honor and glorie both now and for euermore Amen Iames Chapter verses 14. 15. 16. 17 18. 19. Sermon 12. Verse 14. What auaileth it my brethren though a man saith he hath faith when he hath no workes Can his faith saue him 15 For if a brother or sister be naked and destitute of dailie foode 16 And one
his vengeaunce to persequute them when they see they can take no hold-fast of Gods mercie for their intollerable pryde and finall apostasie against his heauenly maiestie they cannot but feare they cannot but tremble Now if the Deuils beleeue there is one God then Psal 14. the Epicures the Atheistes the wicked fooles of the vvorlde vvhich say in their heartes there is no God are worse then deuils If the deuils tremble before Gods presence and throne of iudgement then are many men and women which iest at the day of iudgement make a mocke at appearing before the tribunall seate of God to receyue according to their workes worse then deuils If then hypocrites haue no better faith then deuils haue and it be a most absurde thing to say the deuils are saued then is it no lesse absurditie to say that wicked men by like faith can be saued seeing they are destitute of all goodnesse voide of all righteousnesse farre from all fruites of sanctification Which thing this holy Apostle teacheth vs in this place thou beleuest there is one God thou doest well the deuils also belieue and tremble Finally then it may herehence appeare necessarie that as men are truly iustified before God through faith in Christ so they should by their workes the liuely testimonies of true faith shewe themselues before men to be in deede righteous that as inwardly with God they are made iust by their beleefe so outwardly with men they might be knowen to be iuste by their deedes that so they might adde to their faith vertue to their profession sanctification to their religion holy conuersation which is the scope and drifte of this Apostles doctrine Neither is this doctrine a doctrine eyther rarely heard of or vnusiall in other places of holy Scripture for the whole bodie of the Scriptures teach vs the necessitie of good vvorkes and fruits of sanctification in the saints without which all holinesse is hypocrisie all deuotion dissimulation And to this ende not onely the Prophets in their bookes but our Sauiour Christ in the gospell and the holy Apostles in their sacred writings haue moued men professing godlinesse to the fruits of righteousnesse least they otherwise doing be iustly reprooued for their hypocrisie And for asmuch as it is not onely a matter of most great account in all times to haue this godly care of bringing forth fruites of true sanctification vnto Gods glory but is also the most liuely testimonie of our election who are therefore called of God that we might be Ephes 1. irreprehensible through loue and the sure signe of our regeneration and new birth whose chiefe end is to walke in good workes which God hath prepared for vs as witnesseth the Scriptures we are the workemanship of God Ephes 2. created in Iesus Christ vnto good workes that we should walke therein Which thing also Zacharie the father of S. Iohn baptist maketh the end of our redemption Luc. 1. we are redeemed by him from the power or handes of our enemies that we should serue him without feare in holinesse and righteousnesse all the daies of our life Much more not onely might but also ought to be spoken touching these matters but I hope this may suffice reasonable creatures touching the office of faith and vse or end of good vvorkes in the Saints of God Now God which is the fountaine of all goodnesse the father of all lightes the giuer of all spirituall grace the sender downe of all vertues into our heartes powre downe vpon vs that most excellent gifte of vnfayned faith without vvhich nothing is acceptable nothing pleasant in his sight that it in vs vvorking through loue and vve replenished with all fruites of righteousnesse and abounding in all sanctification may thereby giue infallible testimonie of our iustification and in the whole course of our life may alwaies through righteousnesse and holinesse so glorifie God here that by him vvee may be glorified in the life to come not through our merites but of his only mercie through Iesus Christ our onely Lord and Sauiour who with the father and the holy ghost liueth and raigneth one immortall inuisible and onely wise God both now and for euermore Amen Iames Chapter 2. verses 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. Sermon 13. Verses 20. But wilt thou vnderstand O thou vaine man that the faith which is without workes is dead 21. Was not Abraham our father iustified through workes when he offered vp Isaac his sonne vpon the altar 22. Seest thou not that faith wrought with his works through the works was the faith made perfect 23. And the Scripture was fulfilled which saith Abraham beleeued God and it was imputed vnto him for righteousnesse and he was called the friend of God 24. Ye see then how that of works a man is iustified and not of faith onely 25. Likewise also was not Rahab the harlot iustified through workes when she had receyued the messengers sent them out another way 26. For as the body without the spirite is dead so faith without works is dead In these words of the Apostle there are two things to be considered as appeareth Namely 1. The other part of his confirmation conteining the 3. Thirde argument from the example of Abraham 20. 21. 22. 23. 4. Fourth from the example of Rahab 25. 2. The conclusion of the whole discourse 1. Made and set downe vers 24. 2. Repeated 26. The third reason why true faith is not without good 3. Reason workes is drawen from the example of Abraham who had no doubt a true and liuely faith for which cause hee is Gen. 15. Rom. 4. highly praised both of Moses the Prophet and Paul the Apostle of Christ yet did this great and holy Patriarke by offering vp his sonne Isaac in whom the hope of his posteritie and the truth of Gods promise consisted shew what manner faith he had not a dead barren and fruitelesse faith but quick liuely and plentifull in all good workes to the glorie of God For which cause he receaued a true testimonie from Gods owne mouth and it was set downe by Moses for all posteritie for euermore that he was righteous indeede and the friend of God Such a faith ought euery one of Gods Saints to haue therefore whereby they may recete auestimonie from God man of their integritie righteousnes and iustification The force of this reason is this what maner of faith Abraham the father of the faithfull had such faith ought all his children all the Saintes all that rightly beleeue in God and his Sonne Iesus Christ for to haue also But the faith of Abraham was no shadowe nor shewe but a substance and soundnes of faith His faith was not in worde onely but in worke also not in tongue and talke alone but in truth and veritie not a bare barren fruitelesse faith but a liuely working and plentifull faith such faith therefore ought the faith of all Gods Saints to bee and not
feete cut off gathered bread vnder my table as I haue done so hath God rewarded me His crueltie was punished from God by like crueltie Samuel telleth the same tale to Agag king of the Amalakites whē he cut his bodie in peeces in Gilgal as thy 1. King 15. sword hath made women childles so shall thy mother be childlesse aboue other women and so he slue him and cut him in peeces before the Lorde thus crueltie with crueltie bloud with bloud was repaied from the Lord. And this is the thing which God by his Prophet threatneth against Mount Seir for their crucltie against Israel Ezech. 35. the people of God therefore as I liue saieth the Lorde God I will euen do according to thy wrath and according to thine indignation and hatred which thou hast vsed against them euen as thou hast dealt cruelly euen so shalt thou be cruelly handled The Angel cōmendeth the righteous iudgement of God in executing the seueritie of his Reuel 16. wrath against them who were sharpe seuere and cruell against his people Lorde thou art iust and holy because thou hast iudged these things For they shed the bloud of the Saints and Prophets and therefore hast thou giuen them bloud to drinke for they are worthie Thus haue they the heauier iudgement from God whose deedes are cruel and seuere toward others Neither is this true onely in the crueltie of mens deeds but also in the rigour of their iudgement against others who incurre so much heauier wrath and iuster condemnation from God how much the sharper they are towards their brethren in iudging censuring thē according to the apostles doctrine Our Sauiour Christ had respect and regard to this who disswaded men from rash ambicious and rigorous Matt. 7. iudgement iudge not least you bee iudged condemne not least you be condemned For they incurre the worthier iudgement and shall assuredly find the heauier condemnation which offend themselues in iudging and condemning their brethren S. Paul maketh those mē subiect to the greater cōdemnation who being themselues faultie Rom 2. yet ambiciously censure their brethren therfore saith he thou art inexcusable O mā whosoeuer thou art which cōdemnest for in that thou condēnest other thou cōdemnest thy selfe Wherby the apostle S. Iames disswadeth men from vsurping authoritie of rigourous iudgement of others My brethren saith he be not many masters knowing that we shall receiue the greater condemnation By which it euidently appeareth that how much the more rigorously we iudge others so much the heauier cōdemnation we heape against our selues but most especially being guiltie of the same sinnes or as great as we rigorously condemne in our brethren If wee condemne a theefe to the bottomlesse pitte of hell as vnworthie life yet our selues steale be oppressours vsurers or extortioners of the people if we condemne without fauour or pittie the adulterous person and yet our selues breake wedlocke if we condemne lying and vse our tongues to deceite slaunder and horrible blasphemie if we condemne dronkennesse with austere seueritie yet geue ouer our selues to riotousnes banquetting and faring deliciouslie euery day if we condemne couetousnes yet bee rauished Luke 16. 1. Tim. 6. Ephes 5. with loue of money making our golde our god our siluer our safegarde our substance our succour if wee reprooue anger in our brethren and burne and boile in irreconciled hatred and deadly malice of heart if finally we be rigorous against our brethren and vsurpe ambitiously the authoritie to iudge and condemne them we prouoke the greater wrath we heape vp the seuerer iudgement we receiue the iuster condemnation against our selues Which Saint Iames here vseth as his first reason why wee should not so doe My brethren be not many masters knowing that we shall receiue the greater condemnation The seconde reason why men ought not to vsurpe 2. Reason this authoritie ouer their brethren is from the viewe of our owne weakenes the consideration of our owne condition the facilitie in our selues to fall through naturall frailtie therof the Apostle thus In many things we offend all therefore we must not be too rigorous against other men seeking and looking rather into our owne readinesse to sinne Let vs take the view of all states degrees of men Princes and people masters and seruants fathers children husbands and wiues rich and poore learned and ignorant high and lowe wise and foolish preachers and hearers all all I say are subiect to the same imbecilitie and frailtie of nature in many things we fall all Is there a bodie without a blemishe is there a day without a cloude is there a man without offence is it Prou. 24. true that Salomon saith the righteous and iust man falleth seuen times a day and riseth vp againe are wee not all subiect to sundrie infirmities and offend in many thinges euery one of the sonnes of Adam shall not the remembrance of this our common condition remoue so great seueritie rigor of iudgement from vs This ought then to make vs lesse secure and more remisse and gentle towards the offences of the brethren The very Heathen knew that all men are subiect to H●ratius this condition wherefore one of their owne Poets saide No man liueth without crime or sinne The continuall meditation thereof should induce vs to follow gentlenes and not to vse too great rigour towards others Men fall and sinne as Lactantius hath noted three Lib. 6. c. 13. waies in deedes in speeches in thoughts and cogitations and there is no man which doeth not fall through euerie one of these sundriwise In deede men sinne be they neuer so holy for who is he whose life is incorrupt whose feete haue neuer slipt whose whole life is cleare from all Pro. 20. sinne Shew him me and I will praise him tell mee where he is and I will honour him let me see him and I wil worshippe him as a mortall god He shal be in my iudgemēt holier then Abraham he shal be more renowmed then Moses and Aaron he shal be more pure then Dauid or Daniel he shal be more perfect then Iob the righteous hee shal be more glorious then Paul the elect vessell of Iesus Christ for all these in action haue sinned In wordes whereof in the next place our Apostle shall speake who offendeth not Who either in anger moued or in mirth pleasant or in pastime delighted or by importunitie of men pricked forwarde hath not fallen either to cursing or to slaunder or to swearing or to loosenes or vanitie of his talke that he hath not in respect therof iust cause with Dauid and Sirach to pray to haue the dore of Psal 141. Ecclus. 22. his lips kept and a seale of wisdome set before his mouth that he offend not in his words In thought our falles are so many as that it passeth the strength of man by cogitation not to admit the thing which is either wicked in deed or euil to vtter
this proceedeth from those who beeing sensuall and carnall men men naturall not regenerate perceyue not the things of GOD neither can they vnderstand them because they are spirituallie discerned This is a part of Rom. 8. the wisedome of the flesh which is enmitie with God and neither is neither can bee subiect to him This Isai 5. is a poynt of selfe-wisedome where against the Prophet denounceth vengeaunce wo to them which seeme wise in their owne eyes and prudent in their owne sight Thus to doe wee haue of our mother witte and fathers wisedome euen from our prime parents and first fathers from whome wee drawe all maliciousnesse enuie and iniquitie Hereunto our owne sense mooueth our owne desire leadeth our owne nature pricketh which wee haue sucked with our conception from Adam and Eue and is altogether sensuall and naturall To giue our selues then to bitter enuie to brawling contention to strife and emulation to trust in our owne wits to flatter our selues in our owne conceit to stand too much vpon our pantiples to be quarrelous through pride to chalenge authoritie ouer other men and not to abide the checke of anie to striue and contend with euery one is wisedome in a false perswasion of men but wisedome worldly and wicked VVherewith who so are indued are carnall not spirituall sensuall not regenerate hauing not the spirit but led with their owne sensualitie as beasts in whom is no reason this the Apostle to intimate telleth vs that this wisdome is sensuall also 3 Finally and thirdly it is diuelish The originall of enuie and contention wherein the wicked worldlings repose wisedome is from Satan himselfe the authour the fountaine the well-heade of maliciousnesse enuie contention debate and sed●tion among men whereunto onely through him are men mooued Therefore the Apostle calleth this wisedome diuelish because it is not inspired by God but suggested by Satan not infused from heauen but powred into vs from beneath not instilled from the father of light but ministred vnto vs by the prince of the darkenesse of this world and therefore called diuelish Satan was contentious from the beginning lifting vp himselfe euen against God through the insolencie of his minde for which hee was cast downe from heauen Jude v. 6. and is reserued in euerlasting darknesse to the iudgement of the great day He was a murtherer from the beginning Iohn 8. as Christ witnesseth from whome all enuie hatred malice debate and contention aryseth He is therefore called the enuious man who soweth tares among the corne Matt. 13. of the husbande man euen the seede of hatred sedition debate and contention in the Church of Christ and in the common wealth also By him was the sedicious contention of Core Dathan and Abiram caused by him were Jannes and Iambres stirred vp to withstand Moises Num. 16. Exod. 7. 11. 2. Tim. 3. 8. by him the bellowes of all brawlings were blowne in the Pharisies and Scribes to contend and striue agaynst the open truth of Iesus Christ by him were the malicious Iewes pricked forwarde to withstande and contende agaynst the Apostles and preachers of the Gospell by him were the heretiques hatched who contended against the Catholike fathers in the primitiue Church by him were the proude Popes and prelates of Rome raysed vp to sowe the seede of sedition in all the Churches of Christendome by him are now contentious persons stirred vp to disturbe the peace of Hierusalem by him rebels rise vp against lawfull Princes princes are stirred vp one against another for couetous desire and ambition of minde each to seeke the casting downe of each others crowne and kingdome by him are priuate men set at deadly variance and prouoked often to the shedding of the blood of their brethren by him all contention and sedition all brawlings and brabblements all fallings out and quarrels in priuate states are caused so that we may right well conclude with the Apostle that wisedome to contention strife and debate in whatsoeuer kinde it be is from the diuell and therefore diuelish and these are the qualities and properties wherby it is described Nowe as the worldly and wicked wisedome is by properties noted so is it also set downe by effects which follow contention and strife Whereof Saint Same 's sayth where enuying and strife is there is sedition and all maner of euill workes Whereby he teacheth that sedition and all maner of euill workes ensue and follow contention and strife among men and therefore ought it with all carefulnesse and diligence be auoided That sedition and all maner of euill workes proceed from enuious aed contentious wisedome in few wordes it appeareth out of Salomon who witnessing that when Prou. 13. euery man contendeth striueth for the preheminence and will not giue place to another much mischiefe great disturbaunce disquietnesse and disdaine to ensue sayth Onely by pride doth man make contention and of contention all euill as experience proueth followeth Pride is cause of contention contention of sedition tumults rebellions vprores in cōmon wealths Salomon not in the former place only but elswhere also cōsumeth the first he Prou. 28. that is of a proud heart stirreth vp strife the example of Corah Dathan Abiram cōfirmeth the second for their Num. 16. contentiousnes caused them seditiously to rise vp against Moses Absolom of a contentious spirit couering his aspiring minde with sugered flatterie fell from contention 2. Kings 15. with Ioab to rebellion and sedition against Dauid his owne father The proud and contentious spirite of Ieroboam sonne of Nebat moued him to lift vp his hand against Salomon the king his master and openly to rebel against Rehoboam his sonne for euer Zimrie in like manner 3. Kings 11. 12. through pride became contentious and of contentious seditious and rebellious So that he being Captaine of halfe the hoast of Basha rose vp against Basha his sonne 3. Kings 16. the king and slewe him and raigned in his stead The contentiō of Lacedemō Athens ended in sedition Themistocles enuious contentiō against Aristides raised sparks of sedition among the people Silla Marius contention ended in ciuil dissention The like may be saide of Caesar and Pompey Anthonie and Augustus and infinite the like whose contentions and enuie hath ended in sedition This is true in the Commonwealth This is true in priuate states of men This is true in the Church of Christ This is true in all states and degrees so that Saint Iames saith truely that where enuie and strife is there is sedition and all manner of euill workes Seeing then contention enuy strife causeth sedition and all manner of euill works The wisdome which vpholdeth contention strife and enuie may worthely bee condemned which Saint Iames doeth both in describing the qualities and setting downe the effectes If you haue bitter enuying and strife among your selues reioyce not neither be liers against the trueth This wisdome discendeth
dwell in our mindes then shall God himselfe draw neere in louing fauour vnto vs and ouershadowe vs with the presence a● brightnes of his countenance then shall we be one in t●● God and God with vs then shall hee dwell re●● affli●● with vs Mala. 4. for euer Which thing he geue and graunt vnto vs who hath not spared his only sonne for vs Euē god the father to whom with the sonne and the holy Ghost one one God in glorious trinitie bee praise dominion and maiestie now and for euer Amen Iames Chap. 4. verses 9. 10. Sermon 20. Verse 9 Suffer afflictions and sorrowe ye and weepe let your laughter be turned into mourning and your ioy into heauines 10 Caste downe your selues before the Lord and he will lift you vp THese wordes conteine the thirde part and place of this 4. Chapter which is touching The thirde place ●● part of the Chapter our humiliation and humbling our selues before God which cōsisteth in two things as here by the Apostle is set downe Namely 1. In chastising our selues throgh repentance and mortification of life wherein are two things to be obserued of vs. 1. What he commaundeth To suffer affliction 2 How it is to be done 1. Sorrowing 2. Weeping 3. Turning laughter into mourning 4. Ioy into heauines 2. In casting downe and prostrating our selues before the Lord wherein two things are to be noted 1. What hee commaundeth To prostrate our selues before God 2. Why That God may exalt vs. Now concerning this place it is the doctrine of humiliation and humbling our selues before God for the iniquities and sinnes by vs dayly against him committed Wherein the Apostle opposeth to the former vices in man things contrarie to their wantonnes and pleasures the afflicting and humiliating of themselues to their pride and arrogancie Christian modestie to their carnal delights lasciuious and lewde mirth he setteth down vnfained sorow and griefe whereby their repentance might be shewed whereunto these two verses serue Suffer affliction sorrowe and weepe c. wherin two things are to be considered 1. The chastising of our selues 2. And our casting downe our selues before God 1 Touching the chastising of our selues therin two things may bee obserued 1. what hee commaundeth 2 how the same is to be perfourmed The precept Suffer afflictions which is not an exhortatiō to patience in trouble wherof afterward c. 5. 7. but to chastise and afflict our selues by true repentance and mortification of our liues suffer affliction be you afflicted afflict your selues by true repentance before the Lord. Which exhortation is right necessarie because the whole life of worldly carnally minded men whose happines is in pleasure lust delights of the flesh is altogether spent in riot wantonnes banquetting iollitie laughter mi●th and wicked reioising wherin men drowned forget neglect their duetie vnto God neither remember they the iudgements of god and his heauie wrath which therfore hangeth ouer them as the storie of the first world in the daies of Noe declareth Wherein they were geuen to eating to drinking to riotousnes to wantonnes and all Gen. 7. pleasures of the flesh vntill such time as the floud came vpon them and destroyed them And the example of Sodom confirmeth in the dayes of Lot whereof the Gen. 19. men and the women with al the people gaue themselues whollie to the satisfying and fulfilling of al the lustes and desires of the flesh and excesse of their liues till the Lord rained fire and brimston vpon them from heauen and miserablie destroyed them Which negligence rising from the plentie and prosperitie of worldly thinges almighty GOD foreseeing gaue charge thereof vnto Israel his people that when they came into the land of Canaan where they shoulde Deut. 6. 8. possesse great and goodly Cities which they builded not houses replenished with all manner of goods which houses they filled not welles digged which they digged not vineyardes which they planted not When they had eatē and droken and were full abounding and flourishing in all worldly prosperitie they should take heede least they forgat the Lord who had geuen them all these thinges Seeing then prosperitie and worldly wealth seeing carnall delightes and fleshly pleasures make vs stubborne forgetfull and negligent in our dueties to God is it not necessarie that we be often admonished and earnestlie exhorted thus to chastise our selues by repentance true mortification least we be carried away with the sway of earthly things vnto finall destruction Which when our Apostle Saint James had considered as hauing care of our soules health exhorting vs to true humiliation and chastising of our selues saith Suffer affliction or be chastised and sorowe and weepe that therby our repentance which is to saluation not to be repented of might be witnessed Will we liue for euer then 2. Cor. 7. 2. Tim. 2 must we die here by repentance and mortification to sinne Will we obteine eternall rest then in this life must 1. P●t 1 we be afflicted Wil we reioyce with ioy vnspeakeable and glorious then must we here sorowe for a season Will we haue mirth without end then must wee lament our iniquities in the bodie that our soules may liue in heauen for euermore with God They which haue their pleasure in this world shall surely haue their paine in the world to come as Abraham witnessed to the rich glutton in the Gospell they which are here full shall there want they which here laugh shall Luke 16 Luke 6 there weepe waile and lamente they that liue in pleasure vpon the earth shal suffer punishment and torments in the world to come vnlesse here they mortifie thēselues and be chastised through repentance let vs there fore be admonished by the Apostle let vs holde fast the exhortation of S. Iames Suffer afflictions The afflictions which here we are exhorted to suffer What is affliction here are nothing els but the conceauing of griefe for sinne true and vnfeined repentance for the life past the chastising of our selues by fasting watching praying and such like before the Lord the true mortification of our earthlie members and the subduing of all carnall desires in our selues that thereby we may bee truely humbled before God This affliction holy Dauid suffered thus did he chastise himselfe thus was he afflicted before the Lord when he washed his couch with his teares in the night season Psal 6. Psal 35. and watered his bed with weeping when in the sicknesse of his enemies he humbled himselfe with fasting and his prayer was turned into his bosome when his iniquities Psal 38. 102. 9. were gone ouer his head and as a weightie burthen they were too heauie for him to beare when his wounds were putrified and corrupt because of his foolishnes when he was bowed and crooked very sore when he went mourning all the day long when his reines were full of burning and nothing sound in his flesh when he was weakened very much
father of the Church searching and seeking out rhe true Serm. 4. domi 1. quadrag causes for vvhich the Saintes of God might lavvfully vveepe vvriteth that there be tvvo causes for vvhich they may so do 1 Because they haue omitted through negligence many things vvhich they should haue done 2 Because they haue committed through boldnesse manie things also vvhich should haue beene vndone by them the one he calleth the sinne of omitting the other the sinne of committing and for both ought men to vveepe before God Let vs therefore looke hereinto vvith vvakefull and vvatchfull eyes let vs recorde and recounte vvith our selues vvhat dueties and good things vve haue omitted vvhich vvee shoulde haue done either to God or man either to our selues or others to our ovvne charge or to straungers to our friends or to our enemies let vs call to minde vvhat euill we haue done vvhereby God hath beene dishonoured our neighbours iniuried our selues defiled other by our euill example allured to vvickednesse Hovv vve haue dishonoured God by blasphemie oppressed our neighbours by iniurie vsurie extortion deceite and couetousnesse hovve vvee haue defiled our selues vvith fornications adulteries vvantonnesse and fleshly vncleannes vvith drunkennesse surfetting or the like enormities hovv vve haue dravvne on others to like sinne by sight by persvvasion by action by motion shall it not make vs to vtter our repentance by vveeping If vve forget not that vve haue omitted our dutie of praier and inuocation to god and the performance of humble seruice vnto him that vve haue omitted the ministring to the necessitie of the Saints and the helpe vve should haue shevved to the needie brethren that vvee haue omitted many good opportunities vvhich haue beene offered for the encrease of our vertue fayeth pacience mercie and such like that vvee haue neglected the carefull visiting of the poore destitute vvhich liue in our streetes and complaine and perish before our eyes for lacke of reliefe that wee haue omitted many exercises of prayer of preaching of reading and meditating in the lawe of God that we haue omitted the doing of manie things which appertaine vnto godlinesse and true sanctification and committed much wickednes priuately publikely openly secretely in our soules in our bodies at home and abroade agaynst God and men in our conuersation in our communication haue wee not iust cause to chastise and afflict our selues by weeping When wee heare of our cruell dealings our intollerable pride our silthinesse of the flesh our riotousnesse of life our great falsehoode lying deceyte vnderminding one of another our enuie hatred malice slaunder reproch backebytings and all iniquitie which nowe reigneth in our whole life mercifull God what fountaines what welles of teares shoulde it cause in vs VVherefore if Democritus the Philosopher wept continually Democrit 9. to see the ignoraunce blindnesse and doting follie of man shall not wee weepe day and night to see the blindnesse ignorance wretchednesse and wickednes of our selues whereby we continually prouoke the wrathfull indignation of God against vs VVhen our goods are taken by pirates our wealth consumed by shipwracke our houses burnt with fire our landes taken from vs by violent oppression our riches wasted by pestilent vsurie our libertie restrained by cruell persecution our children miscarie suddenly our friendes die from vs dayly and one misfortune fall on the heeles of another what crying what wringing Psalm 42. 7. Job 2. 15. c of handes what lamenting what weeping is there among vs But that God by our wickednesse is offended his name through vs blasphemed his lawe and holy worde contemned his pacience and long sufferance dayly prouoked and abused his threatnings his admonitions his counsels neglected his louing mercie forgotten and his great benefites not remembred that many good things pertaining to duetie haue beene through our follies omitted and manie wickednesses whereof we should haue beene cleare committed by vs who weepeth who lamenteth Let vs deare Christians in the feare of God euermore remember alwayes holde fast this councell of the Apostle that by sorrowing and weeping wee may shew our affliction and chastising our selues by repentance 3. A thirde way of afflicting our selues is by turning our laughter into mourning our wanton laughing which proceedeth frō the dissolutenes of our minds must bee turned into mourning Here by laughter is vnderstoode that lasciuious and wanton mirth and giggling which is rife among fooles and vaine persons and which they take vp vpon euerie vaine occasion in the world whereby their follie appeareth as Sirach witnesseth who Ecclus. 19. making the vaine laughter of men an argument of folly sayth A mans garments excessiue laughter and going declare what he is descrie his follie And in another place not long after A foole lifteth vp his voice with laughter Ecclus. 21. but a wise man doth scarse smile secretly And Salomon in his preacher like as the noise of thornes vnder the pot Eccles. 7. which for a time crackle but profite nothing for they are consumed suddenly and quickely So is the laughter of a foole this is also vanitie This laughter our Sauiour Christ condemneth crying out wo and denouncing Luke 6. vengeance against such as gaue themselues to wanton mirth and vaine laughter Wo vnto you that now laugh for you shall waile and weepe Our foolish giggling our prophane laughter our dissolute mirth our wanton screaming and scrcking our disordered lifting vp of our voices in our incontinent mirth must be laid aside and be turned into mourning if so be we wil humble our selues by true repentance vnto God And here vnder laughter and mirth are vnderstood also all those delicates and delightes all those merry conceyts and pleasant pastimes all those iollities sportings wherein men take pleasure and so become forgetfull of the iudgements of God and neglect the chastising of themselues for their wealth vnto God Whereunto our Mat. 24. Sauiour Christ witnesseth the world should be giuen towardes the end thereof yea and at the very appearing of the Sonne of God in iudgement whereof the saith As the dayes of Noe were so shall the comming of the Sonne of man be for as in the dayes before the floude they did eate and drinke marie and giue in marriage vnto the day that Noe went into the Arke and knew nothing till the floud came and tooke them away euen so shall also the comming of the Sonne of man be Wherein hee shevveth that in the latter dayes men shal be giuen to brutish pleasures delights and pastimes which the Apostle in the Saints of God would haue to be turned into mourning suffer affliction sorrow and weepe let your laughter be turned into mourning 4. Finally as our laughter must be turned into mourning so must also our ioy be turned into heauines the ioy vvhich worldly minded men conceyue of worldly thinges the wanton reioycing of men must be turned into heauinesse hanging downe of head casting downe of countenance in signe of shame for
they shal be deuoured of hellish torments So that both here and there their owne consciences shall feede and gnaw vpon them and the recordation and remembraunce of these corruptible vanities wherein they onely trusted shall as it were continually eate them vp and consume them And this is no small parte of their miserie and finall destruction which he denounceth against them for the which in despayre and without hope they must weepe howle as they are foretolde by the holy and blessed Apostle The third and last thing wherin their miserable destruction 3. Thing wherin their destruction calamitie standeth and finall calamitie consisteth is that they haue heaped vp treasure for the last dayes These are the treasures of the wicked which shall not helpe but hurte them in the daie of the Lord. For thus prophane rich mē hourd and heape vp treasure of Gods iuste wrath heauy displeasure and deserued indignation against themselues in 2. Cor. 5. the daie of vvrath and indignation vvhen all men shall stande before the throne of Iesus Christe to giue an accompte Rom. 2. of their vvorkes and to receaue according to that they haue done in their bodies bee it good or euill Then shall they lye open on euery side to the iuste iudgements of God and wil they nill they they shal heare the fearefull sentence of destruction against them Then shall their sinnes be reuiued in the midst of their bowels then shall their consciences finde no reste then shall they day and night feele death working in their hearts and hell shall stande before their eyes yea sinne shal be at their right hande and satan at their lefte destruction shal be without to consume them and the immortall worme of conscience within their soule to gnawe them God aboue to condemne them the deuill beneath to take and carie them to fire and brimstone in that bottomlesse lake that burneth for euer wherein their fire faileth not and Isay 66. their vvorme dieth not This is the treasure which prophane riche men lay vp for themselues against the latter dayes Some expound these wordes otherwise you haue heaped vp treasure against the latter day that is in these latter daies wherein you should watch and pray continually that you might be thought worthy to escape the Luk. 21. wrath to come when you should seriously expect and looke for the appearing and comming of Christ in glorie to giue iudgement against all men and to rebuke all Jude 14. 15. the vngodly among them of all their wicked deedes which they haue vngodly committed and all their cruell speaking which vvicked sinners haue spoken against him you giue your selues to heaping hourding vp of riches as if there should be no end eyther of your life or of the world it selfe and the nearer you grovve to the end of the vvorld the more couetous you are you heape vp treasure for your selues against the latter dayes what wickednesse is this Couetousnes ought alvvaies and at all times to be auoided as the roote and mother of all wickednesse but 1. Tim. 6. most especially towards the cōming of Iesus Christ least by worldly carefulnes vve become forgetfull of his comming therfore our Sauiour Christ preparing his disciples against his comming in glorious maiestie to sit in iudgement and to pronounce sentence against all the worlde Luc. 21. aduiseth them aboue other thinges that their heartes be not ouercome and oppressed with dronkennes surfetting and the cares of this world least he come vpon them vnawares notwithstanding euen against this time to be dronken and drowned in couetous desires is great vngodlines And thus doe men heape vp treasure for the last daies Some hereof make this sence Goe to now you rich men you thinke to heape vp riches enough to serue you vnto the last day and to the very ende of the world and therein shewe your extreame couetousnes and vngodlines For what a sinne is this that men shoulde thinke themselues able by themselues to heape and boarde vp enough to serue vnto the last dayes and to the end of the world But to augment and increase their miserie and to paint out their destruction in more liuely and in more fresh colours the Apostle may seeme to haue meant of the heaping vp of the treasures of Gods vengeance and iudgements against them in the latter daies in the day of iudgement And these are the particular circumstances which out of this place in my iudgement may bee gathered whereof thus saith our Apostle Go to now you rich men weepe and howle for the miseries which shall come vpon you your riches are corrupt your garments are moath-eaten your siluer and golde is cankred and the rust therof witnesseth against you and shall eate your flesh as it were fire ye haue heaped vp treasure for the last dayes God for his mercies sake graunt vnto vs such grace from his holy Spirite that wee thereby first seeking the kingdome of heauen and the righteousnes thereof may according to his mercifull promise obtaine all other things necessarie for this present life and that we throgh his speciall grace being risen in all fruites of righteousnes and workes of true sanctification with Christ may seeke the things which are aboue where Christ sitteth at the right hand of God and effectually setting our affections vpon heauenly things and not vpon thinges vpon the earth may also so put our trust and confidence in the Lord that if riches increase and multiplie vnto vs by his goodnes yet we may not set our hearts vpon them but that euen in this life we may with all our might maine lay vp for our selues treasures in heauen where neither rust nor moath doeth corrupt and where theeues breake not in and steale least that we setting our affections with prophane persons vpon vncertaine riches thereby wee treasure and heape vp for our selues treasure of Gods iust iudgements and wrathfull displeasure and so be subiect to this sharpe commination and threatening of finall destruction From which he deliuer vs that suffered bitter death vpō the crosse for vs euen Iesus Christ our Sauiour To whom with the father the holy ghost be praise in the great congregation of the saints now and for euermore Amen Iames Chapter 5. verses 4. 5. 6. Sermon 24. Verse 4 Behold the hire of the Labourers which haue reaped your fieldes which is of you kept back by fraud crieth and the cries of them which haue reaped are entred into the eares of the Lorde of hostes 5 Ye haue liued in pleasure on the earth in wantonnes yee haue nourished your hearts as in the day of slaughter 6 You haue condemned killed the iust and he hath not resisted you IN these wordes are reckoned vp the sinnes and euils of prophane rich men for which this so dreadful a destruction is denounced against them And it is the second branch of the first part of this Chap. in particular The euils and
sinnes of the wicked rich men for which their calamitie is threatened are three 1. Their iniurious and fraudulent detaining of the wages of their Reapers and haruest seruants 2. Their sensua litie which stand●eh in these 3. 1. Pleasure 2. Wantonnes 3. Banquetting and riotousnes 3. Their crueltie which in two thinges appeareth In 1 Condemning the righteous 2 Slaying them when as they resist not 1 The first sinne and euill condemned in these wicked rich 1. Sinne in the wicked men with whom and against whom Saint Iames dealeth and for which so sharpe a sentence of so iust condemnation is geuen out against them is their fraudulent detaining of their hirelinges wages whereof hee geueth speciall example in their haruest labourers such as reaped their fieldes who helping them to get and gather in their graine and corne into their barnes and bringing in the increase of their land for them whereon they liued Yet for so needefull and necessarie so painefull and profitable a worke they were vnrewarded and their wages deteined by fraud from them no doubt an extream point of euill dealing And vnder this particular example the holy Ghost conteyneth all iniurious dealing with their seruants either in this kinde or in any other kinde whatsoeuer The greatnesse of their sinne the Apostle amplifieth in most effectual manner Behold saith he the hire of the labourers which haue reaped your fieldes which is by you kept back by fraud crieth and the cries of them which haue reaped are entred into the eares of the Lorde of hostes 1. Saith he beholde Of which speach there are diuers vses Sometimes it is vsed in cases of ioy and reioycing as when Christ the Prince of peace and eternall Mat. 21. glorie shoulde come into the citie of Ierusalem to the great ioy of all such as receaued him the Euangelist citing the words of Zacharie the Prophet saith Go tell the daughter of Sion beholde thy king commeth vnto thee Zach. 9. meeke and sitting vpon an Asse and a colte the fole of an Asse vsed to the yoke Sometimes it is vsed for a greater euidence certaintie of a thing Saint Iude citing the wordes of Enoch the seuenth from Adam for a great euidence and certaintie Iude v. 14 of the Lords comming to iudge the worlde vseth this phrase of speach Behold the Lord commeth with thousands of his Saints to geue iudgement against all men and to rebuke all the vngodly among them of all their wicked deedes which they haue vngodly committed and of all their cruel speaches which wicked sinners haue spoaken against him In like manner in this place to assure Iob. 4. 18. Reuel 7 them that their wickednes was certainlie gone vp into the eares of the Lorde the Apostle breaketh out in this manner Behold the hire of the labourers which haue reaped your fieldes which is of you kept backe by fraude crieth and the cries of them which haue reaped are entred into the eares of the Lord of hostes Sometimes it is vsed to moue attention vnto a thing spoken and this is familiar in the Prophetes in our Sauiour and the apostles also sometimes to this purpose vsed The Prophet Nahum prophecying of the peace which Nahum 1. Iuda should enioy by the death of Sennacherib the king of the Assyrians to moue them to greater attention thereunto as it may be thought he saith Beholde vppon the mountaines the feete of him that declareth and publisheth peach And Abacuk prophecying of the strange plagues Abacuk 1. calamities which shoulde befall the people for their shamefull iniquitie and contempt of Gods worde to stir them vp to greater attention thereunto as I suppose hee crieth out Behold among the heathen and regard and wonder and maruaile for I will worke a worke in your daies you will not beleeue it though it be told vnto you And may not the princely Prophet Dauid be thought in Psal 133. this sence to haue vsed this word when he commending peace loue and vnitie among men saith Beholde how good and pleasant a thing it is brethren to dwell together in vnitie Sometimes it is vsed in strange and wonderfull things which rarely are heard or seene as Jsai intreating Isai 7. of the strange and extraordinarie rare and wonderfull manner of Christes conception in this wise expresseth it Behold a virgine shall conceaue and beare a sonne and they shall call his name Emmanuel Our Apostle as wondering at the harde dealing of the wicked may not amisse in this sence be thought to vse it Behold the hire of your labourers which reaped c. as a thing therefore either most certaine that the crie of their seruants were entred vnto the eares of God or a thing to bee wondred at that any would be so hearde hearted as to defraude their labourers of their hier the Apostle breaketh out and saith beholde the hire of your labourers c. 2 The hire of those laubourers which reaped their fieldes was detained this amplifieth their wickednes To detame the wages of any labourour who by the toyle and moyle of his bodie and in the sweate of his face eateth his breade connot be but agreat sinne but to denie them their wages by whom our fieldes are reaped our corne and graine got and gathered in to our garners the fruites of our Landes safly brought into our barnes and houses whereof we our wiues children and famylies doe liue the surplus whereof wee turne to the encreasing of our riches is no doute a greuious and most haynous sinne before God therefore the Apostle leauing other seruants whom no dout they defrauded in like manner rehearseth those in whose iniurie their iniquitie most manyfestly appeareth Wherefore he saith beholde the hire of your labourers which haue reaped your fieldes whose wages by you is helde backe through fraude crieth 3 The wages of their hired seruantes was by fraude kept backe to detaine and holde backe the wages of the hierling and seruante which for his lyuing worketh with men is an euill and sinne by the lawe and worde of God forbidden Whereof the Lorde by his seruante Moyses admonished Leuit. 19. the people of Israel to which purpose they had commaundement from the mouth of God that the wages of the hierling should not rest nor remaine with them till the morning intymating that as euery one had done his worke so he should receaue his wages which by the Deut. 24. masters shoulde in nowise bee detained And in another place thou shalt not oppresse saith he the hired seruante that is poore and neadie neither thy brother neither the stranger that is within they gates thou shalt giue him his hire for his day neither shall the sunne goe downe vpon it For he is poore and therewith sustaineth his life least Malach. 3. hee crie vnto the Lorde and it be sinne vnto thee The Prophet Malachie in the person of God condemneth the same in the people who pronouncing iudgement against their manifolde
to flesh lines bodily vncleānes for which causes adultery is oftē set downe as the effect of excesse and this wantonnes as the ofspring of pleasure before condemned as Saint Augustine Augustine Ambrose Hierom. and Saint Ambrose vpon the cited place to the Romans haue obserued and Saint Ierome subscribeth to the same The bellie boyling with wine fometh out filthines Saint Ambrose citing the wordes of Paul to the Church of Sup. 5. Ephes Ephesus be not dronken with wine wherein is excesse writeth in this wise Where is dronkennes there is excesse and luxuriousnesse excesse and luxuriousnesse prouoketh to carnall filthines Salomon the wise man searching and seeking out the Pro. 23 effects of dronkennes deliciousnes of life noteth these two specially Looking vpon strange flesh which is lusting after women vnlawfullie and the speaking of lewd things which is rebaldrie The Prophet reckoning vp the euils and sinnes of Sodome and the cause of that vnnaturall Ezech. 16. lust which burned in their bowels like fire noteth vnto vs their fulnes of bread which was their riotousnesse and delicious life and their slouth and idlenes whereunto they were geuen to haue beene the principall causes of that horrible vncleannes And the practise of Gen. 19. Lot otherwise a man most righteous who after hee was made dronken by his daughters committed incest with Iudith 13 ech of them And Holofernes the Captaine general ouer the armie of the Assyrians then only tempteth the chastitie of Iudith when before he was dronken Seeing therefore this wantonnes is the effect as it were of pleasure of dronkennes and deliciousnes of life therefore in the second place it is added to shew the sensualitie of the wicked here condemned To which their wantonnes as they are too prone by naturall inclination so haue they many prickes and prouokements as filthie songes and sonnets which by their eares passe on to their hearts laughter merimentes iesting which are not comely immodest and vnchast musicke whereby the adulterous heartes of men and women are set on fire and inflamed dalliance toying iesture not conuenient filthie speach and talke the verie instrument of this wickednes whereby chastytie is assaulted continencie inuaded honistie corrupted al filthynes determined To this wantonnes rich men giuing them selues and thereby caried headlong to all manner vngodlines are therefore in this place reproued and it is set downe as the second thing wherein the sensuallytie of prophane persons consisteth which is the seconde sinne for which destrution and finall callamitie is threatened againste them 3 Of their sensualytie the laste and third branch is that they nourished their heartes as in the day of slaughter Whereby their continual studie to banquet and make merie is noted that their whole life might be as it were a continual day of feasting by which they grew as fatte as porke or brawne for satan the deuill to feade on in the day of iudgmente The Hebrues call the daies of feasting the daies of slaughter Because at great feastes there is great killyng great slaughter Calues from the stalle sheepe from the folde oxen from the pasture kyddes from the goates lambes from the ewes deere from the forreste bucke from the chase fish from the sea foule from the fenne birdes from the aire capons from the coope fesant from the woode partrige from the couie rabbet from the warrant and infinite the like are then slayne to bee deuoured so that the daies of feasting may welbe called the dayes of slaughter The prophet Isay speaking of the day of Israels destruction by Nabuchodonosour King of Babilon wherein Isay 22. the people gaue them selues to feasting and banquetting saith in that day did the Lorde call to weaping and mourning to baldenes and sackcloth and beholde ioye and gladnes slaying oxen and killing sheepe eating flesh and drinking wine shewing that in the daies of feasting there was slaughter and killing Whereunto the Apostle Saint James in this place hauing regarde painting out the insaciable desire and studie in the wicked rich men continually to feade and fatten them selues by banquetting feasting saith that they nouriched them selues as to the day of slaughter preparing themselues day by day to feasting and banquetting though it be with the hurt neede and hungerstaruing of the poore people of the land For like fault may not we geue like iudgement pronounce like sentence of condemnation against the riche men of these daies Did not they in the great famine of the land wherewith the poor were miserably pinched sit eating Anno 1586. and drinking feading themselues and feasting banquetting and surfetting wherby they euen nourished their harts as in the day of slaughter and therfore must needs heare the thundering threatning of the Apostle Goe to now ye rich men weepe and howle for the miseries which shall come vpon you c. You liue in pleasure and wantonnes you nourish your hearts as in the day of slaughter you feast your selues with the goods of the poore you pamper vp your selues with the penurie of your brethren you fare deliciouslie euery day by pinching of the needy Goe to now therefore weepe and howle for the miseries which shall come vpon you Your neighboures sterue they pearish with hunger with whom you haue to doe the distressed with famine die in your streetes and yet you prolong your feasting and banquetting continually weepe therefore and howle for the miseries which shall come vpon you who liue in pleasure on the earth who geue your selues to wantonnes and carnal lusts you nourish your hearts as in the day of slaughter geuing your selues to daily banquerting and feeding your selues full much like vnto fedde beastes prepared for the slaughter Albeit there be some couetous rich men so farre from pampering vp themselues in this manner as that they cannot affoorde themselues a good dinner or supper once in a quarter and that for very miserablenes and insaciable couetousnes of their mindes which thing is one of the vexations vnder the sunne spoken of by king Salomon Eccles. 6. in his preacher When men haue riches but yet not a liberall heart to vse them for their comfort who therefore may well be compared to Tantalus king of Phrygia whom poets faine for disclosing the councel of the gods to be tormented in hell with apples ouer his head which as he reached for them departed and went vp higher and water vnder him whereunto when he stouped it flowed away so that he could neither eate nor drinke in his torments yet because for the most part these braunches of sensualitie are commonly in the prophane men of the world therefore he reproueth it as a thing incident to that condition of men And this is the seconde euill for which the Apostle denounceth this fearefull iudgement and vtter destruction against them The third sinne and euill for which these men are 3. Euil or sinne in the couetous mē subiect to this iudgement is their crueltie
which in these two things appeareth 1 That they condemne the righteous men 2 That they condemne them not only but also slay them when they make no resistance The wicked men of this world condemne the righteous at their pleasures they geue what sentence they lust against the iust and godly men they iudge the innocent at their willes if in all thinges they doe not please them which is great crueltie and a thing abhominable before God For he that absolueth the wicked in iudgement and Pro. 17. condemneth the righteous both are abhominable before God saith Solomon Neither do these only wrongfully iudge condēne the righteous but also they slay him and hee resisteth them not This is fiercenes and intollerable crueltie Now the righteous is slaine diuers waies 1 In heart by hatred Hee that hateth his brother in his heart is a murtherer saith Saint Iohn 2 In tongue by slaunder therefore Christ conteineth it vnder the nature of murther 1. Ioh. 3. making it subiect to like iudgement 3 Or by denying helpe in their miserie wherein wee suffer them to Mat. 5 pearish without succour 4 Or when by fraud or force we take or holde from men that which is their owne wherby as much as in vs lieth we murther them 5 Whē finally we bereaue men of their liues Which al agre with this place of Saint Iames and are found in the rich wicked men of this world who albeit themselues by themselues doe not alwaies these thinges yet sith by their meanes and power these are done therefore are they said to doe it So partly by themselues partly by others the rich prophane men of the world condemne and slaye the righteous when he resisteth them not which thing is a point of great crueltie For can there be any crueltie cōparable to that to waxe fierce to rage furiouslie against him that resisteth not Is not this sauagenes farre exceeding the crueltie of the Lion before whom if a man fall downe and lie prostrate seeming neither to stirre striue nor struggle the Lion often suffereth him and toucheth him not But these more rauening then Wolues more hungrie then beares more greedie then Tygers more cruell then Lions fall vpon the righteous to slaye him when he resisteth not Seeing here it is said that these men slay the righteous when he resisteth not it may be enquired whether righteous and iust men wrongfully oppressed may resist at all or no. Our Sauiour Christ instructing his how to behaue Mat. 5. themselues against worldly oppressions and iniuries willeth them not to resist euill but if any smite them on the one cheeke they should holde out the other if any striue for their coates they shoulde let them haue cloake also and if one forced them to goe a mile they should go two The holy Prophet of God Ieremie commending the patience Lament 3. of the iust and righteous man vnto vs affirmeth of him that he geueth his cheeke to him that smiteth him and is filled with reproach The blessed Apostle S. Paul Rom. 12. aduertising the Saints what they should doe in their oppressions and iniuries which here they were sure to sustaine and suffer woulde they shoulde not auenge themselues but rather geue place vnto wrath Isai painting out the singular patience of Iesus Christ the righteous auoucheth Isai 53. that he was brought before his enemies as a sheepe before the shearer and opened not his mouth much lesse resisted The Apostle finally of the iust and righteous man affirmeth that he was slaine of the wicked and resisted not What shall we say then Is it not lawfull at all to resist iniuries but shall wee suffer our selues to be spoyled robbed iniuried smitten and murthered without resisting by notwithstanding thē shal we flesh them animate them encourage them to further mischiefe Shall we as it were pricke them on forwarde to doe more violence in that we resist them not nor withstande their rage and furie Hereunto I answere though it be commaunded vs that we shall not resist and commended in the righteous men that they did not resist their oppressours yet it followeth not that the righteous may not at all resist For touching the commaundement of Christ and his Apostle it is apparant that they spake of impatient resisting of such resisting as was ioyned with greedie desire of priuate reuenge in which manner the Saints of God are euery where forbidden to resist In other respects it is not vnlawful to resist but ether by auoyding their oppressions either by telling the wicked of their iniuries or finally by repelling force by force when we cannot haue the lawfull ayde of Magistrates it is lawful to resist the wicked when they oppresse vs which doctrine may be warranted out of the vnfallible word of trueth Our Sauiour Christ commaunded his Disciples to flie from Citie to Citie when rhey were persecuted and Mat. 10. so by auoiding iniuries to make resistance as it were to their persecutors And when himselfe was in daunger of Iohn 8 stoning he conueyed himselfe from them and did not suffer the Iewes to wreake their wrath vpō him so by his shunning he withstoode their violence When Aretas the gouernour of the Damasens laide waite for Saint Paul he stoode not still but was let downe out of a window by 2. Cor. 11. a baskette through the wall of the Citie and so escaped When more then fourtie men had conspired and sworne Acts 23 his death vowing with an othe● that they woulde neither eat nor drinke before they had murthered him he withstoode their rage and furie when by the conduct of souldiours he fledde to Cesarea Dauid the Saint of God a 1. King 1● c. man iust and righteous seeing the rage of Saul against him offered not himselfe to his crueltie but by auoydaunce withstoode him sometimes onely by turning aside when Sauls speare was readie to haue nailed him to the wall Sometimes escaping by the meanes of his wife being laid wait for Sometimes by flying from place to 1. King 21. c. 22. 23. 24. place as the storie recordeth So then righteous and iust persons compassed about with daunger oppressed of the wicked persecuted by the tyrants of the earth afflicted of the vngodly of the worlde are not hereby forced to stande still to be swallowed vp of daungers but must and may auoide if there be an honest meane therof and so resist the iniuries of men which is neither agaynst precept nor example in holy Scripture duly considered and pondered yea the contrarie were follie and is worthily condemned in men 2 Neither by auoiding and shunning their iniuries is it lawfull onely to resist the wicked but also by telling them of the wicked oppressions and extreame crueltie which they shew towardes their brethren though in the meane time our bodies be subiect to their tirannous outrage and furie Our Sauiour Christ therfore being caught Iohn 18. of the Iewes not against
his good will to be laide vpon our loynes He is at hand to view whether through impacience we bite the lippe hang downe the heade wring the handes stampe with the foote stare with the eyes murmure with our mouthes or any wise frette fume or rage agaynst God or whether in the moderation and quietnesse of our mindes wee in inuincible fortitude manhoode and courage doe beare the oppressions of the wicked that either hee may punish our impaciencie our crowne our constancie with immortalitie and glorie This consideration might teach vs carefully therein to behaue our selues For as the eye of the mistres keepeth the maiden the eye of the parents the childe the eye of the maister his seruant in awe and in order euen so the presence of the Lorde and his watching and wakefull eye keepeth vs in our afflictions in godly moderation that therein we breake not out into rages through our impaciencie 4 Finally the Lord is at hand and the iudge at the doore to execute his iust iudgements vppon them that wrongfully afflict his seruants and powre out the vessels and vials of his wrath agaynst them that trouble his chosen So that albeit our persecutours and aduersaries for a time rage exercise their tyranny vpon vs yet they shall not endure and continue alwayes neyther shall they scape scotfree neyther shall they auoyde the reuenging hand of God which in it due time shall light vpon them in full weight and presse them to powder in his sore indignation who suffereth not the rodde of the wicked alwayes to bee vpon the righteous but by executing vengeaunce vppon their aduersaries giueth peace vnto Israel whereunto hee is readie for as a Iudge hee is at hande to reuenge the righteous and to punish also the wicked and cruell oppressours of his people This place of Saint Iames may easily teach vs that the cause of all impaciencie and desire of reuenge agaynst our aduersaries and all muttering and murmuring in our afflictions proceedeth and groweth from this wicked stocke roote heade or fountaine euen from the ignoraunce of the power and presence of God For were we throughly perswaded that God almightie seeth our miseries is able to deliuer vs beholdeth our behauiour vnder the crosse and will in due time auenge our cause vpon our enemies were we fullie assured that we are not left to the rashnesse and temeritie of foolish fortune and blinde chaunce which thinges Christians doe not acknowledge neither subiect to the willes pleasures crueltie and tyrannie of men but according to the good purpose of our God who numbreth euen euery heare of Matt. 10. our heades so that without his prouidence not one of them shall perish what a steppe would this make to pacience what quietnesse would it worke in our hearts what strong consolation and comfort would it cause in our afflictions howe effectually would it remooue all murmuring from vs that in all things we should holde fast the exhortation of the Apostle grudge not one against another brethren least you be condemned behold the iudge standeth before the doore Reasons why we should be pacient 4 The fourth and last thing in this treatise concerning pacience is the rendring of certaine reasons why the Saints of God ought to addres them to pacience vnder the crosse and the manifold afflictions of this life the reasons are foure as hath beene noted 1 From the example of the Prophets which haue spoken vnto vs in the name of the Lord. Which reason may thus be formed that which the holy Prophets of God haue suffered that wee by their example ought to suffer in like manner but the Prophets of God haue suffered aduersitie and haue had pacience we ought therefore to suffer in like manner and in all our troubles to haue pacience To reason from example of other and thereby to moue to pacience is most vsuall in holy Scripture Christ Matt. 5. our Sauiour exhorteth his to suffer paciently reuilements persecutions and all manner of euill by the example of the holy prophets whome men in their time Heb. 12. likewise persecuted The authour to the Hebrues reasoneth from the example of our Sauiour Christ wherby he stirreth and moueth the Iewes to pacience seeing we are compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses let vs cast away euery thing that presseth downe and the sinne that hangeth on so fast and let vs runne with pacience the race which is set before vs looking vnto Iesus the authour and finisher of the faith who for the ioye that was set before him endured the crosse despised the shame and is set downe at the right hand of the throne of God The Apostle S. Peter also reasoneth from the same 1. Pet. 2. example in sundrie places of his first Epistle to the same vertue but chiefly when he thus writeth hereunto are ye called for Christ also suffered for you leauing you an example that you should follow his steps Who when he was reuiled reuiled not againe when he suffered threatened not but committed it to him that iudgeth righteously in which place through the consideration and vew of Christs example the Apostle moueth Christian seruāts to abide with patience the heauie yoke of their harde seruitude vnder infidels and vnbelieuing maisters And our Apostle S. James persuading the saints and chosen seruants of God patiently to endure the cruel persecutiō and affliction of prophane rich men of this worlde draweth his first argument and reason from the example of the holy prophets take saith he my brethren the prophets for example of suffering aduersitie and of long patience which haue spoken vnto vs in the name of the Lord. The examples of Gods saints in generall who haue bene subiect to manifold afflictions therin haue quit themselues patient are many And leauing Abels suffering by Cain his brother Abraham his patiēce in the iniuries he suffered by the Egiptians Philistins princes of the east Isaac his patience in respect of the iniuries of Ismael and the Philistins Jacob touching the oppressions attempts and deuises of Esau Joseph by the patriarks his brethren and infinite the like the Apostle generally propoundeth vnto vs the example of the prophets which haue spoken vnto men in the name of the Lord. Which thing if we shall particularly vnfold let vs begin with Moses the great Prophete which spoke in the name of the Lorde to Pharao and the Egyptians to Israel and the Iewish people Exod. 5. 6. 16. Nu. 11. 16. the chosen people of God what vile speaches reproches and checkes bore he at the hands of Pharao what rebellions vprores false accusations suffered he at the hands of the people who is so blinde that seeth not or so ignorant which knoweth not How Elias was persequuted by 3. Kings 18. 19. 4. Kings 2. 9. Achab and Iesabel how Eliseus was mocked of the children and sought for by the king of Syriah to haue bene punished the stories aboundantly witnesse vnto all
Aristotle the Philosopher and heathen sending Calisthenes the Philosopher to Alexander the great king of Macedonia Aristotle oftentimes admonished and commaunded him to speake more rarely and most pleasantly to the King because he carried life and death in his tongue The which the wiseman foreseeing saith He that keepeth his mouth Pro. 21. and his tongue keepeth his soule from trouble And in another place comparing a man whose tongue is vnbrideled to a City vnwalled affirmeth As a citie lying open Pro. 25. and vncompassed with walles euen so is a man that cannot refraine his tongue Which when holy Dauid rightly weyed and aduisedly Psal 141. considered he praieth the Lord to set a watch before his mouth and to keep the dore of his lippes And the sonne of Sirach to the like purpose crieth out Who shall Ecclus. 22. set a watch before my mouth and a seale of wisdome before my lips that I fall not sodenly by them and that my tongue destroy me not Thus men thinking themselues to haue an absolute libertie to prate and prattle what they lust without hurt or danger by their saucie pratling and brabling by the euill of their tongues they greatly endanger themselues and so deceiue their owne hearts Neither that onely but by much talke they thinke to attain to the opinion of wisdome with men who onely speaking would be thought to haue all knowledge but hereby they shewe their greater follie and so deceiue their owne hearts The wise man shewing that it is great follie not to bridle and moderate the tongue saith That the voice of a foole is in the multitude of words and elswhere to like Eccles. 5. purpose A wise man concealeth knowledge but the harts of fooles publish foolishnes The same writeth that wise Pro. 12. men vse fewe words then it followeth that such as vse many words are fooles Wherefore when by much talking Pro. 17. we thinke to obteine opinion of wisdome then most of all we descrie our owne follie and thereby we deceiue our own hearts and therefore we ought to refraine our tongues Finally we thinke our tongues to be geuen vs to prattle at our owne pleasures but they are geuen as instruments to set foorth the mightie and manifolde power of God his miracles and wonderous works which he doth towards the children of men abusing then our toungs at our own pleasure we deceue our own harts Seeing therefore by not moderating our tongues we thus deceiue our selues and our owne hearts we ought with all carefulnes to bridle moderate our tongues by the word of trueth As not moderating our tongues we deceiue our own hearts so we descrie our hypoctisie we corrupt and defile our religiō and make it vaine before God therfore ought we to moderate and refraine our tongues whose speach is not good their religion cannot be acceptable Wherefore vnlesse we refraine our tongues our religion is frustrate and in vaine Now the euils and faults of our tongues frō which they not refrained deceiue our heartes and make our religion vaine are sundrie 1 Vaine talke idle friuolous seruing to no profit to no purpose prating and pratling where there is no neede Mat. 12. for which we shall geue account to God as Christ witnesseth protesting that we shall geue accounts vnto GOD Ephes 5. for euery vaine and idle word proceeding from vs. Saint Paul exhorteth the Saints to put from them all vaine and foolish talke as a thing not becomming them From this euill if we refrain not our tongues our religion is in vain For if any man among you seem religious and refraineth not from this this mans religion is in vaine 2 Another euil to be restrained in men is when we talk of god of his word of his law religion not desirous to reforme our liues according vnto his cōmandements This is a great euil and point of halting hypocrifie wherby our religion is frustrate and in vaine For to talke of Gods word and not to walke in his will profiteth or preuayleth nothing to religion therefore almighty GOD shewing their religion to be but in vaine which talked of him in their mouthes but folowed him not in their harts crieth out This people draweth neare vnto me with their lips but their hearts are farre from me worshipping me in vaine teaching doctrines precepts of men Dauid in Gods person telling the hypocrites that their talking of his couenants was in vaine in as much as Psal 50. they would not be reformed in their conuersations saith What hast thou to doe to declare my ordinances and to take my couenants in thy mouth seeing thou hatest to be reformed and castest my words behind thee Our blessed Sauiour intimateth and witnesseth vnto men that to Mat. 7. call vpon him in their wordes maketh them but hypocrites and sheweth their religion to be vaine when they doe not that which he commaundeth therefore he saith that not euery one that saith vnto him Lord Lord shall therefore enter into his kingdome but such as did the will of his father Finally Saint Paul accounting their religion as 1. Tit. vaine which talke of God in their mouthes but obey him not in their deedes condemneth them as hypocrites who say they know God in word but deny him in deedes being abhominable disobedient and to euery good worke reprobate From this vanitie and foolish prating if wee refraine not our tongues though we seeme neuer so religious yet deceaue wee our selues and our religion is in vaine And yet this is our religion in these daies consisting in lip-labour and talking of God and his commandements but not liuing according as in his lawes he chargeth vs and therefore are we not better then very hypocrites For if any man among vs seem religious refraineth not his tongue from this vanity also surely this mans religion is in vaine 3 As from these euils our tongues must be refrayned so from rash iudgement of our brethren when vpon surmised suspitions we condemne them for this also maketh Mat. 9. our religion vaine Therefore our Sauiour to remoue it farre from the Saints his Church forewarneth them not to iudge least they be iudged not to condēne least they be condemned To whom the Apostle agreeth Iudge nothing before the time vntill the Lord come who 1. Cor. 4. shall lighten things that are in darkenes and make the counsels of the heart manifest In which kinde they sinne which by euentes iudge and condemne their brethren accounting them for most wicked vppon whom the hand of the Lords chastisement lighteth The wicked iudged Christ condemned of God Isai 53. Wisd 3 5. chap. Job 4. Psal 41. 8. because he was chastened of the Father The vngodly condemned the Saints for despised because they were subiect to affliction in the world The frends of Job iudged Iob wicked because hee was so many waies plagued of God The people condemned the Galileans those
vpō whom the tower of Siloe fell for great sinners because of Luke 13. Acts 28. the heauy hand of God vpon them whose iudgement our Sauiour condēneth The Barbarians at Melta now called Malta seing a viper spring out of the fire light hang on Pauls hand iudged him a murtherer because of the sight of the viper which they thought to haue been sent of God as against a murtherer of men or some most wicked person Of this euill they are also guiltie who with their mouth●● condemne iudge others vpon external shew outward tokēs Such as condēne those for hypocrites who stoupe in their going those for arrogant and proud which goe vpright those for solemne which are addicted to silence those for wanton and light of life which are pleasant in talke those that are spary in their liues for misers such as are comely apparrelled for lasciuious as his aduersaries did iudge Gneus Pompeius for effeminate because he scratched his head with one finger and the Romans iudged Fabius for slouthfull because in al things he lingered and delaied on till by his lingering he had preserued the weale publike Such as familiarly apply thēselues to men they iudge as flatterers whom they see graue they condēne for Stoicall those that bear iniuries they hold as malicious dissēblers they which in case resist authours of seditiō raisers of tragicall disturbance in common weales whom they see religious aboue others thē they haue as superstitious such as are not come on so farre as themselues they iudge as temporizers and carnall professours This euill of tongue must be restrained otherwise wee iudging after outward appearance which Christ forbiddeth chalenge that to our selues which is Iohn 7. John 5. 2. Cor. 5. James 4. proper to Christ to whom all iudgement is committed Finally condemning and iudging the law which we doe when we iudge our brethren and in so doing are not doers of the law but iudges we make our religiō vaine so if any man seeme religious and refraineth not his tongue from rashly iudging the brethren this mans religion is in vaine 4 Another euill is flatterie a speach and report of false and vaine praise geuen to a man when we speake things that are false to please men feed their humors when we say what they say deny what they deny when to sooth men vp we call day night light darkenes sweet sower good euill And cōtrariwise I say whether in manners or in doctrine this is an euill of the tōgue frō which who so refraineth not his religion is vaine Such are Parasites and flatterers whose mouthes are instruments of false praise Such are false Prophets false teachers false pastors which for feare of men or for their fauour either suppresse the trueth and speake it not or els conceiue lies and vtter them This is pernitious in the Church and in the Commonweale in societies and in priuate families in all states and degrees of men into whose handes it is more dangerous to fall then into the handes of Rauens as Diogenes affirmeth For Rauens eate mens bodies dead but flatterers deuoure them and feede on them liuing Wherefore as of wilde beastes tyrantes are worst so of tame beastes flatterers Which thing is so odious vnto God who is the God of trueth as that they which flatter in their lippes make their religion vaine before him Wherefore if any man among you seem religious and refraineth not his tongue from flattering also this mans religion is in vaine 5 Dissimulatiō whē we pretend one thing in our words and speaches and haue another thing in our heartes whether it be to God as hypocrites or to men as counterfets maketh also our religion vaine Vaine therefore was the religion of the Israelites who promised their Exod. 19 Psal 8 Iosua 24 Psal 12 Mat. 22 faithfull seruice vnto God yet their heartes were turned after wicked waies starting aside like a broaken bowe the religion of Saul and those wicked ones which dissembled with Dauid the religion of the Pharisies and Herodians which glosed with Christ in the gospell the religion of euery man and woman which hath one thing readie in mouth another couered in their hearts and so dissemble in their false tongues is in vaine and odious before GOD for if any man seeme religious and refrayneth not his tongue from this euill also this mans religion is in vaine 6 The sixt euill from which we must refraine is lyeng which is a false signification of speach or voice with intention to deceiue This God to abandon from his people willed them they shoulde not lie one to another Which the Prophet expounding exhorteth the people Leuit. 25 Zach. 8. Ephes 4. to speake the trueth one vnto another and not to lie The Apostle remouing all the workes of the old man corrupted with deceaueable lustes of the fleshe from the true professors of religion and such as were regenerate by the gospell whose religion it marreth exhorteth in this wife Wherefore put away all lying from you and speake the trueth one to another for you are members one of another This euil reigneth in the tongues of many euen professing religion and the Gospell whose houses are vpholden whose riches are increased whose families are mainteyned whose children are aduaunced whose sonnes are made Gentlemen by the lies their fathers and their seruants in their shoppes in their warehouses and in other places haue made for aduauntage But haue we thus learned Christ Is not all our profession and religion in vaine by the falshood of our tongues that wee may also with the Apostle conclude that if any man or woman among vs seeme religious deuout and holy yet refraineth not his tongue from lies but vseth deceit in his lips euen this mans religion is in vaine as the Apostle auoucheth 7 The next euill which corrupteth our religion and maketh it vaine before God is filthie speach whereby not onely our liues are descried to be euill but our hearts to be wicked and our religion counterfette This I would men professing godlines would remember whose mouthes are open oftentimes to great filthinesse as if thereby their religion were not defiled But as Diogenes seeing a faire yong man speaking filthily said art thou not ashamed to dravve a leaden svvorde out of an yuiry scabberd so may vvee say to such as vvhose profession is fayre but their communication filthy are you not ashamed to dravve such filthinesse ou● of so holy and precious a calling and against them also conclude vvith this Apostle if any man among you seem religious and here from refraineth not his tongue this mans religion is vaine 8 Another is slaunder vvhereof chapt 4. verse 11. 9 Another cursing and execration chapt 3. v. 9. 1. Pet. 3. v. 9. 10 A tenth euill is blasphemy and svvearing spoken of chapt 5. verse 12. Of all these and euery one of them vvith such like may vvee vvorthily say vvith the Apostle if any man among